Luke 5:17-32; 18:15-27, 35-19:9
Who Is Welcome?
James Sledge February
1, 2015
The
headlines about income inequality are everywhere. The Washington Post ran as series last week on how badly the recent
recession has hurt black homeowners, pushing many out of the ranks of middle
class. I also saw this headline in The
New York Times. “Middle Class Shrinks as the Bottom Falls Out.”
Accompanying such articles are sobering statistics about how real income has
fallen for those making the least even as it surged for those making the most.
Some of the stats are startling. By next year one percent of the world’s
population will control more than fifty percent of the world’s wealth. Right
now, eighty individuals have more wealth than the bottom fifty percent of the
world’s population. That’s eighty people with more wealth than 3.5 billion
people combined. That’s mind boggling.
One
of America’s great claims to fame was the notion of an egalitarian society, one
not divided between a small elite and a large underclass. We’ve long cherished
the idea that most of us were middle class. That’s never been entirely true,
but it is becoming much less so. We are increasingly a society of haves and have nots, with race playing a
huge role.
Not
that this marks us a particularly onerous on the world stage. Divisions between
haves and have nots are the way of
the world. It’s been that way throughout history. Even socialist and communist
movements with the express goal of ending such divisions have ended up creating
glaring inequalities with spectacularly privileged elites and struggling
masses.
The Church, too, has tended to mirror
such divisions. Bishops and popes have often lived in fabulous luxury.
Protestants haven’t typically favored our leaders in this way, but we have
tended, to a greater degree than Roman Catholics, to create congregations and denominations of
elites and of non-elites, of haves and
have nots. Back in the middle of the 20th century it was a
well-worn joke to call Presbyterians “the Republican party at prayer”
because of our preponderance of well-educated, well-off movers and shakers. We
even require our pastors to have advanced degrees; not like those uneducated
Pentecostals and such.